Sympathetic Weather

Excruciating minutiae.

08 June 2007

Shooting guard or sentient insectoid?

I have decided that San Antonio Spur Manu Ginobili sounds less like a professional basketball player and more like a character in George Lucas' vast universe. He was probably the principal architect on the Geonosis execution arena, where young Anakin, Padme and Obi-Wan are thrown to the nexu before being rescued by Mace Windu.

I'm just saying.

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22 May 2007

Some obligatory Star Wars content

Many thanks to Husband for drawing my attention to this brilliant piece of work.

Which reminds me,
set your TiVos, folks!
The story of Anakin Skywalker's descent into darkness and his son Luke's quest to conquer evil has spellbound audiences for 30 years. The reason for this is simple: the saga of Star Wars is universal and firmly rooted in the mythology and the political history of the entire planet. May 2007 will mark the 30th anniversary of George Lucas' space fantasy that grossed billions worldwide. For the first time take a profound look at the serious subtext behind Lucas' six film milestone. The influence of ancient mythology from Greek legends to King Arthur is visible; but also more recent historical influences, from the political rise of Napoleon to the machinations of Adolf Hitler can be seen.

And while I'm posting Star Wars-related links, may I kindly draw your attention to this book. It is endlessly entertaining and will provide you with all sorts of ammunition to argue with the Star Wars haters in your life (or even those, like my husband, who like Star Wars but just want to be difficult and argumentative).

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01 August 2006

Genres are so limiting

We recently vacationed on the beach in South Carolina. Generally, it takes me several millennia to read a book -- not for lack of interest but for lack of time. When one's at the beach, however, one's got nothing but time. I got through two books and started a third: Theatre of Fish: Travels Through Newfoundland and Labrador, by John Gimlette; Star Wars on Trial: Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Debate the Most Popular Science Fiction Films of All Time, by David Brin and Matthew Woodring Stover, editors; and Everything Is Illuminated, by Jonathan Safran Foer.

On the 13-hour drive home, as I began reading Everything Is Illuminated, I made some sort of snide comment to my husband about how great I am because I read fiction from time to time. (Husband only reads nonfiction and Snoopy comics.) He made a very obvious yet thought-provoking point: Everything Is Illuminated -- which is a novel about, among other things, the Holocaust -- is categorized as fiction, while Star Wars on Trial -- which is an essay collection by real science fiction authors debating Jedi, parsecs and whether after-market parts installed on your R2 unit are just excuses for chronological errors in the films -- is classified as non-fiction.

Now, obviously horrifying Holocaust denial implications aside, that's a world I'd like to live in. Murderous extermination of a people? Fake. Moisture farming? Real!

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